Elements of Agricultural Chemistry
PROFESSOR OF CHEMISTRY IN THE UNIVERSITY OF GLASGOW, AND CHEMIST TO THE HIGHLAND AND AGRICULTURAL SOCIETY OF SCOTLAND. EDINBURGH: ADAM AND CHARLES BLACK. 1860.
ERRATUM.
Page 190, line 11, for gallon read ton.
PRINTED BY R. AND R. CLARK, EDINBURGH.
Transcriber's note: Many of the tables needed to be split to fit space constraints.
The object of the present work is to offer to the farmer a concise outline of the general principles of Agricultural Chemistry. It has no pretensions to be considered a complete treatise on the subject. On the contrary, its aim is strictly elementary, and with this view I have endeavoured, as far as possible, to avoid unnecessary technicalities so as to make it intelligible to those who are unacquainted with the details of chemical science, although I have not hesitated to discuss such points as appeared essential to the proper understanding of any particular subject.
The rapid progress of agricultural chemistry, and the numerous researches prosecuted under the auspices of agricultural societies and private experimenters in this and other countries, render it by no means an easy task to make a proper selection from the mass of facts which is being daily accumulated. In doing this, however, I have been guided by a pretty intimate knowledge of the wants of the farmer, which has induced me to enlarge on those departments of the subject which bear more immediately on the every-day practice of agriculture; and for this reason the composition and properties of soils, the nature of manures, and the principles by which their application ought to be governed, have been somewhat minutely treated.
In all cases numerical details have been given as fully as is consistent with the limits of the work; and it may be right to state that a considerable number of the analyses contained in it have been made in my own laboratory, and that even when I have preferred to quote the results of other chemists, they have not unfrequently been confirmed by my own experiments.
Thomas Anderson
ELEMENTS
OF
AGRICULTURAL CHEMISTRY
THOMAS ANDERSON, M.D.
F.R.S.E., F.C.S.
PREFACE.
CONTENTS.
AGRICULTURAL CHEMISTRY.
INTRODUCTION.
CHAPTER I.
THE ORGANIC CONSTITUENTS OF PLANTS.
CHAPTER II.
THE PROXIMATE CONSTITUENTS OF PLANTS.
CHAPTER III.
THE CHANGES WHICH TAKE PLACE IN THE FOOD OF PLANTS DURING THEIR GROWTH.
CHAPTER IV.
THE INORGANIC CONSTITUENTS OF PLANTS.
FOOTNOTES:
CHAPTER V.
THE SOIL—ITS CHEMICAL AND PHYSICAL CHARACTERS.
FOOTNOTES:
CHAPTER VI.
THE IMPROVEMENT OF THE SOIL BY MECHANICAL PROCESSES.
FOOTNOTES:
CHAPTER VII.
THE GENERAL PRINCIPLES OF MANURING.
FOOTNOTES:
CHAPTER VIII.
THE COMPOSITION AND PROPERTIES OF FARM-YARD AND LIQUID MANURES.
FOOTNOTES:
CHAPTER IX.
COMPOSITION AND PROPERTIES OF VEGETABLE MANURES.
FOOTNOTES:
CHAPTER X.
COMPOSITION AND PROPERTIES OF ANIMAL MANURES.
CHAPTER XI.
COMPOSITION AND PROPERTIES OF MINERAL MANURES.
CHAPTER XII.
THE VALUATION OF MANURES.
CHAPTER XIII.
THE ROTATION OF CROPS.
CHAPTER XIV.
THE FEEDING OF FARM STOCK.
INDEX.
A CATALOGUE OF BOOKS
AUTHOR'S EDITION.
NEW EDITION OF KITTO'S CYCLOPÆDIA.
A THIRD EDITION OF
Edited by the Rev. WILLIAM LINDSAY ALEXANDER, D.D., with the assistance of numerous contributors.
NEW EDITION, 1862.